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China’s new VAT Law took effect on 1 January 2026, prompting a series of administrative releases that align preferential regimes, customs treatment, and reporting obligations. The guidance tightens SME VAT incentives, extends cross‑border e‑commerce import VAT exemptions until 2027, and introduces new import VAT incentives for strategic sectors that run until 2030. Multinational groups should review compliance and documentation to meet the updated thresholds and reporting requirements.
China’s new VAT Law took effect on 1 January 2026, prompting a coordinated overhaul of preferential policies and administrative rules. Import tax incentives for sectors such as pharmaceuticals, R&D, and energy were extended through 2030, while the Hainan Free Trade Port launched a zero‑tariff resident consumption regime. The State Taxation Administration also clarified SME income‑splitting rules, tightening compliance for small‑scale taxpayers.
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China has removed the 9% export VAT rebate on PV modules, marking a shift from price‑led subsidies to value‑based competition. The change is expected to raise costs for manufacturers and influence module pricing across markets. The policy reflects industry maturity and a focus on quality, efficiency, and long‑term bankability.
China's Ministry of Finance announced a phased rollback of VAT export rebates for battery products, cutting the rebate from 9% to 6% from April 2026 to December 2026 and eliminating it entirely from January 2027. Photovoltaic product rebates will also be scrapped from April 2026. The move is expected to squeeze margins for exporters unless they can pass costs to overseas buyers, with industry experts forecasting gradual price increases of 2–3% for power batteries and 2–4% for energy storage batteries.
China has lowered the import VAT on 16 agricultural products, including refined sunflower and rapeseed oils, from 13% to 9% effective 2 February 2026. A new tariff line 1512190010 was created for refined sunflower oil, and the change applies to a range of oils and fats. Products imported from the USA remain subject to retaliatory MFN tariffs.
China’s State Administration of Taxation clarified VAT starting thresholds for the 2026 Value Added Tax Law. Natural persons’ daily threshold rises to RMB 1,000 per transaction, with special rules for continuous transactions and a monthly RMB 100,000 threshold. The announcement also simplifies compliance by deeming filing fulfilled when VAT is invoiced by authorities or withheld, and allows small‑scale taxpayers to waive exemptions transaction‑by‑transaction.
China’s new VAT Law effective 1 Jan 2026 introduces updated thresholds for small‑scale taxpayers. Monthly and quarterly thresholds remain at RMB 100,000 and RMB 300,000, while the per‑transaction threshold is doubled to RMB 1,000. Natural persons in six specific activities must aggregate sales monthly, affecting foreign‑invested enterprises’ supplier and invoicing practices.
China's Ministry of Finance has announced that goods returned from e‑commerce exports will be exempt from import duties, import VAT and consumption tax from 1 January to 31 December 2027. The move aims to support the growth of cross‑border e‑commerce. The exemption applies to goods returned via e‑commerce platforms.
Chinese authorities have advanced the timing of VAT payments for firms that collect money before delivering services, requiring tax on the full amount received earlier. The change may push businesses over the CNY5 million threshold, forcing a switch to general VAT taxpayer status.
China’s 2026 tax reform will keep domestic service enterprises exempt from VAT and introduce several other incentives. The policy also allows social insurance contributions to be deducted from taxable income, offers preferential corporate income tax rates for eligible firms, and provides personal income tax deductions to spur household demand.
The Chinese Ministry of Finance issued Announcement No. 9/2026 on January 31, 2026, defining the goods and services subject to the 9% VAT rate. The policy lists a wide range of agricultural products, utilities, media, and real estate transactions that will be taxed at this rate.
The Chinese Ministry of Finance issued Announcement No. 15/2026 on Feb 2 2026, outlining interim measures for input VAT deductions on long‑term assets. The measures clarify the scope of long‑term fixed assets, set a 5 million‑yuan threshold for mixed‑use assets, and define the adjustment period for deduction. These rules apply to assets acquired from Jan 1 2026 or recognized before Dec 31 2025.
China’s Ministry of Finance issued Announcement No. 11 on 31 January 2026, establishing new VAT and consumption tax rules for exported goods and cross‑border services. The announcement, effective 1 January 2026, sets criteria for VAT exemption, outlines refund rates and formulas, specifies consumption‑tax exemptions, and requires export tax refunds to be claimed within 36 months. It also repeals earlier notices.
China’s government has reclassified mobile data, broadband access, SMS and MMS as basic telecom services, raising the VAT rate from 6% to 9%. HSBC estimates the hike will reduce China Mobile’s 2026 net profit by 6%, China Telecom’s by 12% and China Unicom’s by 13%, with overall earnings for operators falling 6% to 13%. The change is expected to affect mobile operators’ revenue streams significantly in 2026.
China’s Ministry of Finance and State Taxation Administration has reclassified certain telecom services, raising the VAT rate from 6% to 9% on mobile data, SMS, MMS, and broadband access. The change takes effect from the beginning of 2026, prompting operators to consider price adjustments or bundle redesigns to mitigate revenue impacts.
China Telecom and China Unicom will be subject to a 9% VAT rate on core telecom services, as announced on 1 February 2026. This marks a change in the VAT treatment for these services. The announcement highlights the new rate for the companies' core telecom operations.
China’s State Taxation Administration announced new mandatory VAT registration rules effective 1 January 2026, requiring businesses with annual taxable sales above RMB 5 million to register as general VAT taxpayers. The announcement introduces retroactive compliance, mandatory registration for specific sectors, and automatic reclassification for late registrants, increasing compliance risk for businesses near the threshold.
China’s Ministry of Finance announced the cancellation of VAT export rebates for photovoltaic glass products effective 1 April 2026, which is expected to give a short‑term boost to soda ash prices. Battery product rebates will be phased out during 2026 and fully eliminated by 2027. The policy, declared on 9 January 2026, is part of a broader effort to curb excess inventory in the soda ash market.
China’s new Value‑Added Tax Law and its Implementing Regulations entered force on 1 January 2026, bringing significant changes to taxable transaction definitions, VAT rates, and taxpayer status thresholds. The law retains the 13 %, 9 %, and 6 % rates, introduces a 3 % levying rate for the simplified tax method, and adjusts the real‑estate VAT rate for individuals to 3 %. Enterprises exceeding RMB 5 million in annual taxable sales must switch to the general taxation method, and the definition of taxable services and intangible assets now focuses on consumption within China or domestic sellers.
China will scrap value‑added tax rebates on photovoltaic products from April 2026, ending the export rebate for PV modules. Between April and December 2026, battery product rebates will be cut from 9% to 6%, and the full removal of PV rebates will take effect on 1 January 2027. The policy shift follows a November 2024 reduction of solar wafer, cell and module rebates from 13% to 9%.